To mark his contributions to world peace, United Nations Secretary General Boutros Boutros-Ghali is awarded the Great World Peace Award from the Oughtopia Peace Foundation of South Korea at Seoul's university on March 29, 1996. | (Photo: Reuters/Korea UN)

UNITED NATIONS — Former U.N. Secretary-General Boutros Boutros-Ghali has died, Venezuelan U.N. Ambassador Rafael Dario Ramirez Carreno, president of the U.N. Security Council for February, said on Tuesday. He was 93.

An Egyptian, Boutros-Ghali served one five-year term as U.N. chief from 1992 to 1996.

The 15-member Security Council observed a minute's silence. No further details on his death were immediately available.

As the United Nations' first secretary-general from Africa, Boutros-Ghali associated himself with the famine in Somalia and organized the first massive U.N. relief operation in the Horn of Africa nation.

But success eluded him there and elsewhere as the United Nations tottered in an increasingly disorderly post-Communist world, with the world body and the big Security Council powers underestimating the deep animosity behind many conflicts.

Secretary General Boutros Boutros-Ghali (L) speaks before the General Assembly as part of Human Rights Day activities at the United Nations in New York, December 10, 1996. The Security Council at the U.N. will hold informal balloting later December 10 to test the popularity of four candidates vying to succeed Boutros-Ghali as secretary general. The General Assembly President Razali Ismail is at left in photo. | (Photo: Reuters)

He was criticized for the U.N's failure to act during the 1994 Rwandan Genocide and for not pushing hard enough for U.N. intervention to end Angola's civil war in the 1990s, which was at the time one of the longest running conflicts in the world.

Boutros-Ghali found himself jeered in Sarajevo, Mogadishu and Addis Ababa. His style was to wade into crowds and confront protesters when security guards permitted. "I am used to fundamentalists in Egypt arguing with me," he told Reuters.

He shocked many in Sarajevo when he said he was not trying to belittle the horrors in Bosnia but that there were other countries where the "total dead was greater than here."

In Ethiopia, he told Somali warlords and clan leaders to stop accusing the United Nations and him of colonialism, adding that Somalis should be worried that former colonial powers would ignore their plight if they continued to fight.

"The Cold War is finished," he said. "Nobody is interested in the poor countries in Africa or anywhere in the world. They can easily forget Somalia in 24 hours."